Cormie

From Fenway to First Ballot, Leigh Cormie Goes American

Leigh Cormie searched the voter rolls at the American Legion in Vineyard Haven.

“There I am!” he said as a volunteer thumbed through the pages.

Taking his ballot into the voting booth, he officially exercised his democratic privilege for the first time — in this country at least.

“This is a big thing for me,” he told the volunteers in his vestigial Down Under accent as he affixed an “I voted” sticker to his lapel.

Nonprofits Awarded Funds By Permanent Endowment

The Permanent Endowment for Martha’s Vineyard has awarded grants totaling $25,176 this fall to 14 Island nonprofit organizations. “It was wonderful to be able to provide financial support to almost two-thirds of the organizations who approached us for funding this cycle,” said endowment chairman Anne Williamson.

VNA Coordinator

VNA Coordinator

April McCarty has joined Vineyard Nursing Association as the nurse intake coordinator, the bridge between physicians and hospitals and the VNA’s home health care services.

“Having a nurse in this position is a shift for the VNA, in response to the growth in demand for services and the level of complications that many cases present,” said chief executive Bob Tonti.

trees

Clearing Trees To See Forest’s Old Ecosystem

The red pine plantations of the Manuel F. Correllus State Forest have been described as recently as 1998 by this paper as a “pine cathedral,” with evenly spaced rows of the northern evergreen towering above a forest floor nearly barren except for a carpet of needles. Now that cathedral has been all but sacked by fungal barbarians known as diplodia pinea which infect the trees from the shoots and rot them to the core.

Shore Shakes With the Sound of Munitions

A blast reverberated around the Island on Wednesday night as an off-Island team of Naval explosives experts detonated five potentially dangerous World War II-era bombs on the beach near Quansoo in West Tisbury.

On Wednesday morning a couple walking the beach near the cut between Tisbury Great Pond and the Atlantic Ocean discovered a suspicious object in the water and contacted the police.

New School Services Mean Higher Costs In All Island Towns

The All-Island School Committee approved a $3.85 million 2012 shared services budget for Vineyard schools presented by superintendent Dr. James H. Weiss last Thursday.

The budget is up 7.65 per cent over last year, mainly due to three new programs. The superintendent’s office will expand the Bridge Program for children with autism, add an at-large physical therapist and expand the summer school program.

Edgartown Settles on Carnegie Site

After months of discussion, the Edgartown library building committee has selected its current North Water street location as the site for expansion.

The committee had been considering either the current Carnegie building or the old Edgartown School as two possible sites for the new library. The preliminary structural report for both buildings came back favorably, but a new building code that came into effect at the end of September found the old school unsuitable for use as a library.

Library Designs in West Tisbury Build Momentum for Expansion

With a potentially generous state grant on the line, the West Tisbury Library trustees are gearing up for a grant application this winter to help underwrite an ambitious plan that would see doors to a dramatically expanded library open early in 2014.

Report from Chesapeake Bay Shows Fewer Young Stripers

The perceived decline in striped bass stocks was underscored by a report out of Maryland last month that shows fewer young fish than last year in Chesapeake Bay, the place where stripers spawn.

The annual young-of-the-year index for striped bass released by the Maryland Department of Natural Resources is 5.6, well below the average of 11.6. Last year, the index was 7.87; in 2008 it fell to 3.20. In 2007 the index was 13.39.

The young-of-the-year index is considered a barometer on the health of striped bass, which spawn in the spring each year.

signs

Sheriff McCormack Elected to Third Term

After the most intense contest in memory at a county election, Dukes County sheriff Mike McCormack was back in his office yesterday, but offering the prospect of some changes in response to the criticisms of his two challengers.

As it turned out, Mr. McCormack won re-election reasonably comfortably in Tuesday’s election, receiving 4,509 votes across the six Island towns, compared with 3,251 for his main challenger, former state police Sgt. Neal Maciel. The third candidate, former Oak Bluffs Det. Warren Gosson, garnered 405 votes.

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